1,007 research outputs found

    Birth to Three: Extension\u27s Role in the Early Years

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    Recent research about brain development in infants and young children has raised public awareness about the importance of the early years, but there is little consensus about what those findings mean for policy and practice. Extension\u27s community-based network, well-trained staff, strong community ties, and links to campus-based resources make it uniquely positioned to help families, communities, and states develop sound research-based responses to ensure a strong start for their youngest citizens

    Wooden Planks: A Tool for Youth Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math Exploration

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    Wooden planks are a tool for developing youth skills through science, technology, engineering, and math exploration. These are small planks that can be stacked to create complex structures as youths explore math and physical relationships in an applied context. Building with wooden planks also cultivates planning, reasoning, and team skills as youths design and build structures. We developed an event in which adult and youth teams competed to build structures from wooden planks. Our Building Challenge proved to be effective in cultivating youth–adult engagement and expanding Extension\u27s reach to new audiences while also raising funds for youth programs

    The Impact of Tour-Based Diversity Programming on County Extension Personnel and Programs

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    This article explores the effect that planning and conducting an intensive multi-day, tour-based diversity workshop can have on the professional development and Extension work of the county Extension educators involved. Survey data was collected from the county Extension educators who planned workshops throughout Idaho. Educators reported that the process of hosting the workshop led to significant advances in their professional development, strengthened relationships with underserved groups, and facilitated greater inclusiveness in Extension programming. Planning and conducting intense training programs can be an effective way to promote more tailored and appropriate Extension responses to a community\u27s distinct issues

    The Communicator: Electronic Newsletter Provides Expert Support to FCS County Educators

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    Extension specialists are challenged to provide expert support to county faculty on an ongoing basis, particularly in geographically large states with low populations. The Communicator is a newsletter developed by University of Idaho Family and Consumer Science specialists to update county faculty on research findings as they develop programs to meet clientele needs. Survey data show that county faculty in Idaho use the newsletter effectively, reading it promptly and extensively upon arrival and applying the information in their programs. Family and Consumer Sciences professionals are invited to subscribe to The Communicator as a resource for their ongoing professional development

    Using a Historical Tour to Teach Extension Audiences About Diversity and Human Rights

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    Idaho\u27s Journey for Diversity and Human Rights is a traveling workshop designed to teach about the roots of the state\u27s people and their human rights challenges. Designers planned to acquaint participants with the richness and diversity of Idaho\u27s past and broaden their perspective on the way in which past residents coped with issues not much different from those current residents face. Participants report gains in knowledge of Idaho\u27s past and present challenges of human rights and diversity and plan to apply that knowledge in their daily lives. Educators can modify and replicate Idaho\u27s Journey to fit any state or region

    Collective motor dynamics in membrane transport in vitro

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    Key cellular processes such as cell division, internal cellular organization, membrane compartmentalization and intracellular transport rely on motor proteins. Motor proteins, ATP-based mechanoenzymes, actively transport cargo throughout the cell by walking on cytoskeletal filaments. Motors have been studied in detail on the single motor level such that information on their step size, ATP turnover rate, stall force, average run length and processivity are well known. However, in vivo, motors are often found working together, raising the question of how motors work together in transport. In their native environment, motors are bound to membrane material so that they can diffuse through a lipid bilayer, suggesting that their collective behavior may rely more on dynamic self-organization than experiments until now have allowed. In this thesis, an in vitro approach is presented to study collections of motors as they self-organize to actively transport membrane along microtubule tracks. Motors are specifically attached to a membrane reservoir and when they encounter cytoskeletal tracks, the motors walk on the track and extract membrane tubes from the reservoir. We find that dynamic fluctuations in motor densities and effects such as cooperative binding are key players in the collective action of motors in membrane transport.Grant FOM-L1708M.UBL - phd migration 201

    The Museum of the City of Seattle

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    This thesis proposes to examine the urban restoration of a neglected and underutilized area of downtown Seattle, that being the parking garage bound by the intersections of Second Avenue, Yesler Way, and James Street, adjacent to the Pioneer Square Historic District. This urban restoration will take place in the design of a new museum dedicated to the history of Seattle. This design would also incorporate new spaces for the Seattle Underground Tour, currently conducted from the nearby Pioneer Building. In addition to providing a cultural resource for the city, this concept will provide outdoor space for use by the public and will restore a piece of the urban fabric that was destroyed in the 1960's urban movement. This site was the original location of the Seattle Hotel, a building that was demolished and converted into its present-day form, much to the chagrin of city preservationists

    Discounting in Multicausal Attribution: The Principle of Minimal Causation

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    19 pagesA series of three experiments investigated the effect of information about one possible cause of an event on inferences regarding another possible cause. Experiment 1 showed that the presence of a second possible cause had no effect on the perceived probability that the first possible cause influenced the event. However, if the second cause is cited as having definitely influenced the event, then the probability that the first possible cause influenced the event is reduced. Experiment 2 showed that the presence of a second possible cause does reduce the judged probability that a given cause was present at the time of an event. The final experiment revealed that the tendency (found in Experiment 1) to discount the involvement of the first cause given the involvement of a second cause diminishes when subjects were more highly motivated and confronted with their own discounting. These results are inconsistent with Kelley's account of discounting and provide some support for a proposed explanatory heuristic, the principle of minimal causation. Users of this principle analyze a situation until they have identified a minimal set of sufficient causes; other possible causes are ignored or dismissed

    Ceramic Welds, and a Method for Producing the Same

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    A method of producing a ceramic weld, including identifying a ceramic first surface and a ceramic second surface to be bonded together, maintaining a non-oxidizing atmosphere over the first and second surfaces, and engaging the first and second surfaces to define a joint. An arc is generated between an electrode and the joint to create a liquid phase, and the liquid phase is cooled to yield a solid fusion layer, wherein the first and second surfaces are joined in the fusion layer
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